NCGA SUPPORTS AG DATA TRANSPARENCY EVALUATOR

MARCH 2017

Share

The age of big data means big decisions for farmers as they decide who to trust with their information. An industry-wide effort to bring transparency to ag technology contracts is gaining momentum with the launch of a new website: agdatatransparent.com.

The Ag Data Transparency Evaluator is a tool designed to help farmers understand how their ag data is used when signing up with technology providers to use precision ag products.

Companies must answer a set of ten questions to determine compliance with certain core principles for ag data ownership, consent and privacy. Products are reviewed by a third-party administrator, based upon the answers to the questions for transparency, and then awarded use of the “Ag Data Transparent” seal if approved.

Since the Ag Data Transparency Evaluator effort was launched at Commodity Classic in 2016, the organization’s webpage has been hosted at American Farm Bureau Federation’s website. American Farm Bureau was instrumental in getting the Evaluator off the ground.

“After our first year of operation, the Evaluator tool has grown up,” says Todd Janzen, administrator for the project. “That means moving to our own, independent website, enabling technology companies to easily link and show their compliance with the Ag Data Core Principles. The ultimate winner is the farmer who can easily find background to research precision ag products,” Janzen explains.

The new website allows farmers to easily review how their ag tech provider answered the ten questions. The site also publishes the Core Principles the industry established for ag data in November 2014.

“Growers know the data we produce and collect on our farms comes with a huge value. So, it matters how and when that data may be used by third parties. The Ag Data Transparency Evaluator takes the guesswork out of understanding how companies may collect and use the data I produce as a farmer,” says Britt Raybould, a farmer from St. Anthony, Idaho. “Instead of losing myself in the fine print of terms and conditions, I get straightforward answers to ten questions that help me make smarter decisions about the data partners I work with in my operation.”